Jaime K. Devine
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
30 Papers
14 Citations
Jaime K. Devine is an academic researcher from Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Actigraphy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Jaime K. Devine include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & Brandeis University.
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Papers
Impact of daily yoga-based exercise on pain, catastrophizing, and sleep amongst individuals with fibromyalgia
Asimina Lazaridou,Alexandra Koulouris,Jaime K. Devine,Monika Haack,Robert N. Jamison,Robert R. Edwards,Kristin L. Schreiber +6 more
TL;DR: Yoga may reduce pain and catastrophizing, as well as improve sleep, but these changes were modest across study participants, and future randomized, controlled trials will allow determination of the most effective treatments for FM.
Sleep disturbances and predictors of nondeployability among active-duty Army soldiers: an odds ratio analysis of medical healthcare data from fiscal year 2018
TL;DR: Nearly half of soldiers had a sleep disorder or sleep-related medical diagnosis in 2018, but their sleep problems are largely not profiled as limitations to medical readiness, and nondeployability is more likely to occur in soldiers who have sleep e-Profiles in addition to these issues.
Alterations of pain pathways by experimental sleep disturbances in humans: Central pain-inhibitory, cyclooxygenase, and endocannabinoid pathways.
Monika Haack,Larissa C. Engert,Luciana Besedovsky,Michael Goldstein,Jaime K. Devine,Rammy Dang,Keeyon Olia,Victoria Molina,Suzanne M. Bertisch,Navil F. Sethna,Norah S. Simpson +10 more
TL;DR: In this article , the effect of experimental sleep disturbances on three pathways involved in pain initiation/resolution: (1) the central pain-inhibitory pathway, (2) the cyclooxygenase (COX) pathway, and (3) the endocannabinoid (eCB) pathway.
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Differential effects of an experimental model of prolonged sleep disturbance on inflammation in healthy females and males
Luciana Besedovsky,Rammy Dang,Larissa C. Engert,Michael Goldstein,Jaime K. Devine,Suzanne M. Bertisch,Janet Mullington,Norah S. Simpson,Monika Haack +8 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that sleep disturbances causally dysregulate inflammatory pathways, with opposing effects in females and males, which has the potential to advance the mechanistic understanding of the pronounced sexual dimorphism in the many diseases for which sleep disturbances are a risk factor.